Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
Peak: How All of Us Can Achieve Extraordinary Things
Peak: How All of Us Can Achieve Extraordinary Things | K Anders Ericsson
The expert on expertise and inventor of the 10,000-hour rule offers his insights and techniques on how to master any skill. We live in a world full of people with extraordinary abilities. Consider what Roger Federer can do with a tennis ball, or Connor McDavid with a puck. There are chess grandmasters who can play several dozen different games simultaneously--while blindfolded--and a seemingly unending supply of young musical prodigies who would have astonished aficionados a century ago. We are dramatically better at just about everything than we were just a generation ago.We assume, though, that these peak performers are the lucky ones, the ones with a gift. That's only partly true. The fact is we are all lucky. We all have that gift. As Ericsson's whole career has shown, with the proper practice, we are allcapable of extraordinary feats. The techniques that chess players use to develop their skills seem quite different from the methods pianists use to improve their playing. But at a deeper level, they are all variations on a single fundamental approach to learning, what Ericsson has named "deliberate practice": a simple, yet powerful system for enhancing learning. This approach to expertise has the potential to revolutionize how we think about every sort of education and training. We can define the limits of our talents. Whether you want to step up your game at work or help your kid achieve athletic or academic goals, Ericsson's revolutionary methods will show you how to master almost anything.
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
Pick icon
100%
review
ShaaM
post image
Pickpick

It tells you how people reach at an Expert Level Performance and also discusses about innate talent and those skills that can be developed with practice even if you don't have innate talent.

blurb
violabrain

As a professional musician with a background in neuroscience, I am annoyed that his story about perfect pitch in the introduction is factually incorrect! Those kids did not develop perfect pitch through the training he describes. They developed what scientists who study perfect pitch call “heightened tonal memory.“ A totally different thing than perfect pitch.

Megabooks I‘ve caught three medical/animal inaccuracies in Reese‘s book this month. It‘s frustrating when authors don‘t do basic research into what they write. 3y
violabrain @Megabooks Very! :( It makes you skeptical of everything else in the book… 3y
7 likes2 comments
quote
GoneFishing

Even the most motivated and intelligent student will advance more quickly under the tutelage of someone who knows the best order in which to learn things, who understands and can demonstrate the proper way to perform various skills, who can provide useful feedback, and who can devise practice activities designed to overcome particular weaknesses.

Cortg Excellent quote! 7y
30 likes1 stack add1 comment
quote
GoneFishing

So here we have purposeful practice in a nutshell: Get outside your comfort zone but do it in a focused way, with clear goals, a plan for reaching those goals, and a way to monitor your progress. Oh, and figure out a way to maintain your motivation.

redval Adding to your above comment I think we have to have a technique to find solutions to our problem 5y
27 likes1 comment
quote
GoneFishing

This is a fundamental truth about any sort of practice: If you never push yourself beyond your comfort zone, you will never improve.

CindyMyLifeIsLit This is what we try to make our students understand! They believe it about sports, but not academics. 7y
redval @CindyMyLifeIsLit I agree with you 5y
30 likes1 stack add2 comments
quote
GoneFishing

Learning isn‘t a way of reaching one‘s potential but rather a way of developing it.

CindyMyLifeIsLit I need to read this--there's just too many good quotations in it! 7y
26 likes2 stack adds1 comment
review
smccallum
post image
Pickpick

An interesting read. Highly recommend it to people interested in how the brain works. It does get a bit repetitive regarding ideas but the anecdotes remain interesting

blurb
Exia
post image

redval Hard focused work is necessary to improve but to understand a problem or to get a bigger picture about the problem diffuse mode activities are really helpful 5y
1 like1 comment
blurb
Exia
post image

blurb
smccallum
post image

Heading into the last chapter of this book, lots of very interesting ideas!

35 likes2 stack adds
blurb
smccallum
post image

Anyone interested in the brain must read this! It is blowing my mind on a chapter by chapter basis

36 likes1 stack add
blurb
smccallum
post image

Some recommended reading from my singing teacher

quote
keithmalek

If you stop believing that you can reach a goal, either because you've regressed or you've plateaued, don't quit. Make an agreement with yourself that you will do what it takes to get back to where you were or to get beyond the plateau, and then you can quit. You probably won't.

quote
Ms.Mercado
This post contains spoilers
show me
post image

"The most important gifts we can give our children are confidence in their ability to remake themselves again and again and the tools with which to do that job."

blurb
nkunka
post image

That's what's wrong with everything. It's the mad who are in charge. Who decided that was a good idea? The gods I suppose, but they're madder than all the rest. We live under the jumpy heel of insanity, is what we do, and is it any wonder we drink, and worse?

1 like1 stack add